Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Mozart wrote seventeen Church Sonatas (sonata di chiesa), also known as Epistle Sonatas, between 1772 and 1780. These are short single-movement pieces intended to be played during a celebration of the Mass between the Epistle and the Gospel.
Three of the sonatas (Nos.12,14,17), include oboes, horns, trumpets and timpani. The rest are scored for organ and strings (with no violas, only two violins and basso continuo), where in some of them (Nos 7-10,13-15,17) the organ has an obbligato solo part, while in the sonatas Nos 1-6,11,12,16, the organ accompanies along with the figured bass.
------------------------------------------------------------
No.1 0:00:06
No.2 0:02:25
No.3 0:06:39
No.4 0:10:43
No.5 0:15:36
No.60:18:48
No.7 0:23:31
No.8 0:30:00
No.9 0:36:14
No.10 0:40:18
No.11 0:45:43
No.12 0:51:23
No.13 0:56:47
No.14 1:01:58
No.15 1:06:01
No.16 1:13:08
No.17 1:17:43
------------------------------------------------------------
Painting: Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - Imperial summer palace of Schönbrunn, garden façade (c.1759)
------------------------------------------------------------
No copyright infringement intended.

III (Maylene and the Sons of Disaster album)

III is the third studio album by Maylene and the Sons of Disaster. It was released June 23, 2009, and all pre-orders shipped on June 18, 2009. The first single from the album is Just A Shock, which was uploaded to the band's MySpace as a promo for the album. About a week before the album's release another song was released to the public: Step Up (I'm On It). On June 19 the album was leaked in its entirety onto the internet. The song "Harvest Moon Hanging" is a reference to the Harvest Moon from the Bone series (most notably collection six, Old Man's Cave). The album debuted at number 71 on the Billboard 200 in its first week of release. It was announced that their song "Step Up (I'm on It)" was used as the official theme for the inaugural WWE Bragging Rights Pay-Per-View. In 2010, was released a Deluxe Edition of the album in iTunes, containing two new songs and the music video for "Step Up (I'm on It)". "Step Up (I'm on It)" also was on Season Two: Episode One of the critically acclaimed series "Sons Of Anarchy", when Bobby came back to the clubhouse after his jail time. "Step Up (I'm on It) is also in the video game EA Sports MMA.

III (Espers album)

III is Espers' fourth full-length album. It was released on October 20, 2009. The band (known for bleak and melancholic music) has stated in a press release that they've "attempted to create something that would be perhaps cheery at times, though that mark may have been missed.”

Reception

Allmusic's Thom Jurek gave the album a glowing review, concluding that "This band may take their time between releases now, but they get exponentially more sophisticated and adventurous, not only in their composed material, but in their approach to making records."

Uncut's John Mulvey described it as "frequently terrific" but "not quite in the same class as 'II'," its predecessor.

The BBC's David Sheppard gave it a positive review, concluding that "much of this unostentatiously produced album...could have been recorded at any time during the last 40 years and will probably still beguile four decades hence."

Michael Cramer of Dusted Magazine gave it a mixed review, describing it as an awkward hybrid of the band's first two albums: "In opting for a more concise and song-based approach while largely retaining (if in somewhat attenuated form) the production aesthetic of its predecessor, III occupies an uncomfortable middle ground between II and Espers’s debut, and resultantly is a weaker album than either."

Critical reception

The album generally received positive reviews from music critics. Pitchfork critic Kim Kelly described the record as "an intense listen, and a wholly cathartic one as well," and further explained: "There are plenty of moments of outright aggression, bleak, harrowing passages of unrelenting blasts, narrated by a chaotic, urgent voice that veers between angry wails and sparse, Slint-like sotto voce intonations depending on the lyrical bent."PopMatters' Craig Haynes regarded the album as the band's "chef-d’œuvre." Haynes also stated: "Merging melodic elegance with blackened rancor might seem on paper to be an incongruent mix. But the longer you listen, the more it all makes perfect, albeit idiosyncratic, sense – admirably reflecting the conflict and confusion of life itself." Christopher R. Weingarten of Spin described the album as "a circling Venn diagram where math rock and black metal meet" and "more bleak shame-spiral than Liturgical transcendence."

III (JoJo EP)

III (pronounced Tringle) is a triple singleextended play by American recording artist JoJo. The 'tringle' consists of three new songs, "When Love Hurts", "Save My Soul" and "Say Love". The singles premiered on JoJo's official soundcloud page on August 20, 2015 and was released officially on August 21, 2015 to all digital retailers ahead of her third as yet untitled studio album. All three songs will receive accompanying music videos & single treatments, with "When Love Hurts" being released as the first official single from JoJo's third studio album. It is scheduled to be released to mainstream radios in the United States on November 17, 2015.

Promotion

Prior to the release, JoJo performed "When Love Hurts" and "Say Love" for the first time live at iHeartMedia on August 6, 2015, and has scheduled intimate performances attended by her fans before the official release of the tringle. She has since been performing at several clubs and has attended many interviews with Teen Vogue,Jezebel,MTV,VH1,Time andBillboard, among others.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (German:[ˈvɔlfɡaŋ amaˈdeːʊs ˈmoːtsaʁt], English see fn.; 27 January 1756– 5 December 1791), baptised as Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart, was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical era. Born in Salzburg, Mozart showed prodigious ability from his earliest childhood. Already competent on keyboard and violin, he composed from the age of five and performed before European royalty.

At 17, Mozart was engaged as a musician at the Salzburg court, but grew restless and traveled in search of a better position. While visiting Vienna in 1781, he was dismissed from his Salzburg position. He chose to stay in the capital, where he achieved fame but little financial security. During his final years in Vienna, he composed many of his best-known symphonies, concertos, and operas, and portions of the Requiem, which was largely unfinished at the time of his death. The circumstances of his early death have been much mythologized. He was survived by his wife Constanze and two sons.

Mozart - Complete Church Sonatas

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Mozart wrote seventeen Church Sonatas (sonata di chiesa), also known as Epistle Sonatas, between 1772 and 1780. These are short single-movement pieces intended to be played during a celebration of the Mass between the Epistle and the Gospel.
Three of the sonatas (Nos.12,14,17), include oboes, horns, trumpets and timpani. The rest are scored for organ and strings (with no violas, only two violins and basso continuo), where in some of them (Nos 7-10,13-15,17) the organ has an obbligato solo part, while in the sonatas Nos 1-6,11,12,16, the organ accompanies along with the figured bass.
------------------------------------------------------------
No.1 0:00:06
No.2 0:02:25
No.3 0:06:39
No.4 0:10:43
No.5 0:15:36
No.60:18:48
No.7 0:23:31
No.8 0:30:00
No.9 0:36:14
No.10 0:40:18
No.11 0:45:43
No.12 0:51:23
No.13 0:56:47
No.14 1:01:58
No.15 1:06:01
No.16 1:13:08
No.17 1:17:43
------------------------------------------------------------
Painting: Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - Imperial summer palace of Schönbrunn, garden façade (c.1759)
------------------------------------------------------------
No copyright infringement intended.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 7 in C major, K 309 (284b) (1777) is a piano sonata in three movements:
0:00 Allegro con spirito
5:32 Andante un poco adagio
10:18 Rondo (allegretto grazioso)
A typical performance takes about 16 minutes.
The work was composed during a journey to Mannheim and Paris in 1777-78. The sonata was complete in a few days in early November 1777. The andante movement is a "portrait" of Rose Cannabich (his pupil), the 15-year-old daughter of the Mannheim Kapellmeister Christian Cannabich. Upon reviewing a copy of the manuscript, Mozart's father Leopold wrote that it was "a strange composition. It has something in it of the 'rather artificial' Mannheim style, but so very little that your own good style is not spoilt".
Performed by Mitsuko Uchida.

Mozart: Complete Piano Sonatas

Download & Streams (Spotify, iTunes, Amazon Music, Deezer, Google Play and more): https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/MozartCompleteSonatas
More information: https://www.brilliantclassics.com/articles/m/mozart-complete-sonatas/
Facebook: https://facebook.com/Brilliantclassics
Mozart’s piano sonatas date from 1773 until 1788 – a period in which his style matured at a truly remarkable rate. The earliest sonatas are very much in the galant style of W.F and CPE Bach, and in places Scarlatti’s influence can be detected. However, the late sonatas, such as K457 are full of surprises, and here the influence of Haydn is to the fore – even predicting Beethoven in passages. The years from 1773 to the late 80s saw the rapid development of the piano from a novelty and experimental instrument, to the st...

Mozart - Complete Church Sonatas

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Mozart wrote seventeen Church Sonatas (sonata di chiesa), also known as Epistle Sonatas, between 1772 and 1780. These are short single-movement pieces intended to be played during a celebration of the Mass between the Epistle and the Gospel.
Three of the sonatas (Nos.12,14,17), include oboes, horns, trumpets and timpani. The rest are scored for organ and strings (with no violas, only two violins and basso continuo), where in some of them (Nos 7-10,13-15,17) the organ has an obbligato solo part, while in the sonatas Nos 1-6,11,12,16, the organ accompanies along with the figured bass.
------------------------------------------------------------
No.1 0:00:06
No.2 0:02:25
No.3 0:06:39
No.4 0:10:43
No.5 0:15:36
No.60:18:48
No.7 0:23:31
No.8 0:30:00
No.9 0:3...

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 7 in C major, K 309 (284b) (1777) is a piano sonata in three movements:
0:00 Allegro con spirito
5:32 Andante un poco adagio
10:18 Rondo (allegretto grazioso)
A typical performance takes about 16 minutes.
The work was composed during a journey to Mannheim and Paris in 1777-78. The sonata was complete in a few days in early November 1777. The andante movement is a "portrait" of Rose Cannabich (his pupil), the 15-year-old daughter of the Mannheim Kapellmeister Christian Cannabich. Upon reviewing a copy of the manuscript, Mozart's father Leopold wrote that it was "a strange composition. It has something in it of the 'rather artificial' Mannheim style, but so very little that your own good style is not spoilt".
Performed by Mitsuko Uchida.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Mozart wrote seventeen Church Sonatas (sonata di chiesa), also known as Epistle Sonatas, between 1772 and 1780. These are short single-movement pieces intended to be played during a celebration of the Mass between the Epistle and the Gospel.
Three of the sonatas (Nos.12,14,17), include oboes, horns, trumpets and timpani. The rest are scored for organ and strings (with no violas, only two violins and basso continuo), where in some of them (Nos 7-10,13-15,17) the organ has an obbligato solo part, while in the sonatas Nos 1-6,11,12,16, the organ accompanies along with the figured bass.
------------------------------------------------------------
No.1 0:00:06
No.2 0:02:25
No.3 0:06:39
No.4 0:10:43
No.5 0:15:36
No.60:18:48
No.7 0:23:31
No.8 0:30:00
No.9 0:36:14
No.10 0:40:18
No.11 0:45:43
No.12 0:51:23
No.13 0:56:47
No.14 1:01:58
No.15 1:06:01
No.16 1:13:08
No.17 1:17:43
------------------------------------------------------------
Painting: Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - Imperial summer palace of Schönbrunn, garden façade (c.1759)
------------------------------------------------------------
No copyright infringement intended.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Mozart wrote seventeen Church Sonatas (sonata di chiesa), also known as Epistle Sonatas, between 1772 and 1780. These are short single-movement pieces intended to be played during a celebration of the Mass between the Epistle and the Gospel.
Three of the sonatas (Nos.12,14,17), include oboes, horns, trumpets and timpani. The rest are scored for organ and strings (with no violas, only two violins and basso continuo), where in some of them (Nos 7-10,13-15,17) the organ has an obbligato solo part, while in the sonatas Nos 1-6,11,12,16, the organ accompanies along with the figured bass.
------------------------------------------------------------
No.1 0:00:06
No.2 0:02:25
No.3 0:06:39
No.4 0:10:43
No.5 0:15:36
No.60:18:48
No.7 0:23:31
No.8 0:30:00
No.9 0:36:14
No.10 0:40:18
No.11 0:45:43
No.12 0:51:23
No.13 0:56:47
No.14 1:01:58
No.15 1:06:01
No.16 1:13:08
No.17 1:17:43
------------------------------------------------------------
Painting: Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - Imperial summer palace of Schönbrunn, garden façade (c.1759)
------------------------------------------------------------
No copyright infringement intended.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 7 in C major, K 309 (284b) (1777) is a piano sonata in three movements:
0:00 Allegro con spirito
5:32 Andante un poco adagio
10:18 Rondo (allegretto grazioso)
A typical performance takes about 16 minutes.
The work was composed during a journey to Mannheim and Paris in 1777-78. The sonata was complete in a few days in early November 1777. The andante movement is a "portrait" of Rose Cannabich (his pupil), the 15-year-old daughter of the Mannheim Kapellmeister Christian Cannabich. Upon reviewing a copy of the manuscript, Mozart's father Leopold wrote that it was "a strange composition. It has something in it of the 'rather artificial' Mannheim style, but so very little that your own good style is not spoilt".
Performed by Mitsuko Uchida.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 7 in C major, K 309 (284b) (1777) is a piano sonata in three movements:
0:00 Allegro con spirito
5:32 Andante un poco adagio
10:18 Rondo (allegretto grazioso)
A typical performance takes about 16 minutes.
The work was composed during a journey to Mannheim and Paris in 1777-78. The sonata was complete in a few days in early November 1777. The andante movement is a "portrait" of Rose Cannabich (his pupil), the 15-year-old daughter of the Mannheim Kapellmeister Christian Cannabich. Upon reviewing a copy of the manuscript, Mozart's father Leopold wrote that it was "a strange composition. It has something in it of the 'rather artificial' Mannheim style, but so very little that your own good style is not spoilt".
Performed by Mitsuko Uchida.

Mozart - Complete Church Sonatas

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Mozart wrote seventeen Church Sonatas (sonata di chiesa), also known as Epistle Sonatas, between 1772 and 1780. These are short single-movement pieces intended to be played during a celebration of the Mass between the Epistle and the Gospel.
Three of the sonatas (Nos.12,14,17), include oboes, horns, trumpets and timpani. The rest are scored for organ and strings (with no violas, only two violins and basso continuo), where in some of them (Nos 7-10,13-15,17) the organ has an obbligato solo part, while in the sonatas Nos 1-6,11,12,16, the organ accompanies along with the figured bass.
------------------------------------------------------------
No.1 0:00:06
No.2 0:02:25
No.3 0:06:39
No.4 0:10:43
No.5 0:15:36
No.60:18:48
No.7 0:23:31
No.8 0:30:00
No.9 0:36:14
No.10 0:40:18
No.11 0:45:43
No.12 0:51:23
No.13 0:56:47
No.14 1:01:58
No.15 1:06:01
No.16 1:13:08
No.17 1:17:43
------------------------------------------------------------
Painting: Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - Imperial summer palace of Schönbrunn, garden façade (c.1759)
------------------------------------------------------------
No copyright infringement intended.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 7 in C major, K 309 (284b) (1777) is a piano sonata in three movements:
0:00 Allegro con spirito
5:32 Andante un poco adagio
10:18 Rondo (allegretto grazioso)
A typical performance takes about 16 minutes.
The work was composed during a journey to Mannheim and Paris in 1777-78. The sonata was complete in a few days in early November 1777. The andante movement is a "portrait" of Rose Cannabich (his pupil), the 15-year-old daughter of the Mannheim Kapellmeister Christian Cannabich. Upon reviewing a copy of the manuscript, Mozart's father Leopold wrote that it was "a strange composition. It has something in it of the 'rather artificial' Mannheim style, but so very little that your own good style is not spoilt".
Performed by Mitsuko Uchida.